Brightwell v. McAfee

155 S.W. 820, 249 Mo. 562, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 88
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 8, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 155 S.W. 820 (Brightwell v. McAfee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brightwell v. McAfee, 155 S.W. 820, 249 Mo. 562, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 88 (Mo. 1913).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

This is a suit in equity to divest the title to certain lands in Platte county out of defendant, and vest it in plaintiff.

The prayer is for an accounting and that the deeds transferring the land be declared to be mortgages, and for other proper relief. From a judgment for plaintiffs, defendant appeals.

The suit was originally brought by Richard T. Brightwell and Sallie L. Brightwell, his wife, as plaintiffs, against Howard B. McAfee, as defendant. Sallie L. Brightwell subseqtiently died, and a revivor was had in the names of the present plaintiffs; two of the heirs of the deceased, declining to consent to be joined as plaintiffs, were made defendants. •

In 1891 Sallie L. Brightwell and Richard- T. Brightwell, her Husband, executed a deed of trust to secure a note made to A. J. Hamilton for $1513. Hamilton thereafter died, and his administrator caused [567]*567the trustee named in tire deed of trust to advertise the -land for sale, and on April 10, 1897, it was sold and bought in by the administrator. A few days after the sale, the Brightwells, with McAfee, the defendant, and others as sureties, gave a redemption bond, which was filed and approved in the circuit court of Platte county.

Prior thereto an arrangement had been entered into by the Brightwells and McAfee, under which the former were to deed all the property covered by the Hamilton deed of trust to McAfee; on the day of the sale of the land under the deed of trust, the Bright-wells made a quit-claim deed to McAfee for a purported consideration of five dollars, of all the land described in the Hamilton deed of trust, absolute in form, but contended by the plaintiffs to he by way of security to McAfee for the repayment of the money he proposed to obtain and advance for them to redeem the property from the said deed of trust; to accomplish this, he was to sell such portions of the land as would he necessary to raise money to pay off the Hamilton debt and expenses, etc., incident thereto, after which the remaining portions of the land not sold,, were to be reconveyed to Mrs. Brightwell. This deed was not recorded. On July 28, 1897, the Brightwells executed another deed to the same land to McAfee for the purported consideration of one dollar, the purpose only, admitted in appellant’s answer, being to correct an.error or defect in the description of the land contained in the deed first mentioned. The last deed was filed and recorded. On the same day the last mentioned quit-claim deed was executed to McAfee, he sold twenty-five acres of the land to Jane Perril for $1200 and received the money therefor, and executed a deed of trust to M. Noll, Jr., on the home place of the Brightwells to secure a note for $800; and paid to the administrator of Hamilton $2067.37 in full of the debt and interest which had been secured by the deed of [568]*568trust aforesaid, and received a full release by a quitclaim deed made to him, said McAfee. In the payment of this debt, McAfee used the $1200 he had received from Mrs. Ferril, the $800 he had realized from Noll, Jr., and advanced $667.30 out of his own funds. From November 1, 1897, to October 16, 1900, McAfee sold twenty acres of the Brightwell land to the Southwest Loan & Land Company for $700, a lot to S. S. Aker for $225, and other portions of said land to Nancy A. Tabler for $425; in addition to these sums received by him, the Brightwells paid him in cash at different times, up to June 11, 1906, the aggregate sum of $993.74. On April IN, 1808, McAfee paid off the Noll deed of trust and received a full release of the same. The total amount of money received by McAfee from the sale of the portions of the land, with the additional sum paid to him by the Brightwells in cash, is $3483.74. The total amount expended by him for all purposes was about $2567.30. According to the undisputed evidence, therefore, a cash balance, $816.44, remained in McAfee’s hands to cover any possible interest, insurance, taxes, repairs and other expenses incurred on account of said land. During the entire time of these transactions the Brightwells remained as they had been long before, and as Bichard T. Brightwell and the administrator of Sallie L. Brightwell were at the time of this suit, in absolute possession of the portion of the lands not sold. At the time of the foreclosure under the Hamilton deed of trust these lands were worth from $6000 to $8000, and at the time of the trial the remainder of the lands not sold was worth from $4000 to $5000.

Such portions of the petition filed ’herein as are necessary to a review of defendant’s objections thereto, are as follows:

“And. plaintiffs state that the said Sallie L. Brightwell being so the absolute owner of said real estate, she, together with her husband, the plaintiff, [569]*569Richard T. Brightwell, did make, execute, acknowledge and deliver to one Albert J. Hamilton their promissory note for the sum of $1513 dated on the 18th day of June, 1891, with interest thereon from date at the rate of ten per cent per annum, and to secure said note did make, execute, acknowledge and deliver to George W. Day, as trustee for said Albert J. Hamilton, their certain deed of trust on all of said lands, which said deed of trust was duly recorded in the office of the recorder of deeds in and for said county of Platte in Book 26 at page 155'.
“And plaintiffs further state said Albert J. Hamilton died intestate on or about the-day of-, 1896, in Platte county, and'that one A. C. Hamilton was duly appointed and legally qualified as administrator of the estate of said Albert J. Hamilton, deceased, and as such administrator became the legal holder of said promissory note; that the said Sallie L. Brightwell and her husband, the said Richard T. Brightwell, having made default in the payment of said promissory note, the said George W. Day, as trustee as aforesaid in said deed of trust, on the request of the said A. C. Hamilton, administrator as aforesaid, and the legal holder of said promissory note, did proceed to foreclose said deed of trust by advertising all of said real estate for sale on the 10th day of April, 1897, in accordance with the provisions of said deed of trust.
“And plaintiffs state that the said Sallie L. Brightwell, being then in great financial embarrassment, and being ignorant of business matters, and being unable to procure sufficient ready money with which to pay said note and deed of trust, she, together with her husband, the plaintiff Richard T. Brightwell, in order to prevent a sale and sacrifice of their said lands by such foreclosure of said deed of trust, did apply to the defendant McAfee for a loan to take up said note and deed of trust; that while [570]*570¿aid defendant at that time could not make a loan to said Sallie L. Brightwell to take up said note and deed of trust, he did agree with her and her said husband to stop said sale and to save to her said real estate from said sale and sacrifice; that by some arrangement, the exact nature of which plaintiffs are not fully advised, the said defendant did procure a postponement or stay of said proceedings; that said real estate at the time aforesaid was well worth more than double the amount of said lien and debt against the same, and at a fair valuation was worth at least the sum of eight thousand dollars.
' “And plaintiffs further state, that after the stay of the proceedings of foreclosure aforesaid, an arrangement and contract was entered into by said Sallie L. Brightwell and the plaintiff, Bichard T.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W. 820, 249 Mo. 562, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brightwell-v-mcafee-mo-1913.